Things seemed like they were really looking up for William, but at home the arguments between Alfred and Mary increased so they soon split up. William moved in with his mother. .
Now in high school DuBois really started to develop a knack for race relations. At the young age of fifteen he became the local correspondent for the NY times. He was an outstanding student and it showed, so he desired to attend Harvard like most other students of his caliber; but do to poor family resources he was unable to attend. DuBois was known in his senior year of high school and he had to de3al with some devastating news, the death of his mother. This tore him apart, and his grades started to slip. Luckily he had his family and friends to help him get back together. DuBois graduated as the first black to graduate from GBHS. It's a little know fact that William's transcripts noted that he was Italian, not black, because if his mother told them he was black she would have had to pay for him to attend there (even though most of the people there knew he was black. It's quiet confusing. From more help from his family and friends and a scholarship he was able to attend Fisk College (now known as university).
Later Years.
Now that DuBois has been accepted into Fisk University that would be his first trip down south. DuBois attended Fisk College for three years. During his time there, he encountered forms of racism that he never imagined. Now that he was down south, it was different, they knew he was black. During his first year at Fisk DuBois met a family of a lynched victim. That experience torn DuBois apart. At that point in his life, he never experienced such hatred. That inspired him to become a writer, editor and a powerful speaker on race relations. Also, while at Fisk DuBois spent two summers teaching a southern school and in doing so he also learned more about the south. During his last semester, he met a young woman named Elise Washington.